CHINAR SHADE
Literary and Cultural Writeups .
Thursday, May 7, 2026
THE SPECTACLE OF SUNRISE IN PARIS
PARIS AT NIGHT
PARIS AT NIGHT
Paris at night shows its true self instead of hiding. The Seine flows past the city and reflects Notre-Dame, the Louvre, and the Eiffel Tower, turning stone and glass into shimmering copies on the water so Paris feels like a dream you can walk through. The Tower stops being just metal and becomes something magical when it sparkles every hour, and people use that moment for proposals, photos, and quiet wishes. The city’s 37 bridges connect everything, and the old Pont Neuf still carries crowds while the Pont des Arts once held thousands of love locks. Thinkers like Sartre and de Beauvoir used to cross these bridges, and today lovers, artists, and insomniacs do the same without anyone judging. Museums close but the Mona Lisa still watches in the dark, and the Opéra Garnier glows like a stage for every story Paris has told. You can hear Chopin’s piano music drifting from apartment windows, soft and slow, like the city humming to itself. The Moulin Rouge still turns its red windmill as dancers perform where art and nightlife have mixed for over a hundred years. The terraces at Cafe de Flore and Deux Magots are full of tourists from everywhere and locals who come to talk, drink, and watch each other, keeping the old Paris habit of seeing and being seen alive. Painters like Van Gogh loved how night wasn’t just black but deep blue and orange, and writers like Hemingway said Paris travelled with you because the nights stayed in your memory. Picasso met people here after dark and started new kinds of art, while fashion from Chanel and Saint Laurent changed how people dress to go out, with shop windows on Rue Saint-Honoré shining like displays. All of this makes Paris at night feel full of energy: people crossing bridges, buying tickets, ordering wine, arguing, loving, and living. The light on the river, on the buildings, and on faces tells you what the city is about. You come to see the monuments, but you stay because Paris feels alive and personal. Every night it begins again, offering the same streets and lights to anyone who wants to be part of it, reminding us that a city is not its stones but the choices, desires, and moments of the people who move through it, and in that sense Paris at night becomes a mirror: it shows us not only what the city is, but who we are when nothing else is watching.
Paris is illuminated at night because a city without light is a city without witnesses, and Paris refuses to be forgotten; its glow transforms stone into memory, iron into longing, and passing faces into fleeting art, so that beauty, freedom, and history remain visible even when the sun withdraws its sanction.
( Avtar Mota)
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
PARIS IN RAIN
RAIN IN PARIS
Rain in Paris is not weather but ontology. The city, so devoted to appearance : its facades, its fashion, its careful cafés arranged like stage sets, suddenly loses its certainty under water. Balconies weep onto awnings, and the Seine River ceases to reflect monuments and instead dissolves them, turning Notre-Dame into a trembling smear of gray, and the Tower’s lattice into a half-erased theorem by the second level, as if geometry itself were provisional. Along the promenades, the plane trees stand unmoved, their bark mottled like old frescoes, shedding wet leaves that stick to the walk like signatures the rain refuses to dry. Higher up, the rain washes Montmartre hill clean, stone steps slick and shining, Sacré-Cœur bleached pale as bone against a sky that has forgotten how to be blue. The Pont Neuf forgets whether it is bridge or mirage. Tourists gather under the Champ de Mars with plastic ponchos the colour of lost tickets, consulting maps that bleed ink, learning that the city will not pose for them today. They queue instead at the Louvre and the Orsay, trading the drowned horizon for guarded canvases, where rain is painted but never felt, where Mona Lisa smiles through glass while the real world smudges.
Cobblestones on paths become mirrors, and every passerby inherits two selves: the upright figure hurrying under an umbrella, and the liquid double that follows at their feet, distorted, fugitive. Bookstalls along the quai draw their green shutters like eyelids against the wet. This is why Parisians love the rain and resent it also: it exposes the city’s great secret, that permanence is a conceit. Haussmann’s boulevards, meant to impose rational order, grow porous; the city reverts to flux. Yet in that dissolution there is a strange honesty. The rain strips Paris of its postcard, and what remains is not less beautiful but more human : the smell of wet chestnut trees in the Luxembourg, the hiss of tires on Boulevard Saint-Germain, a baker sliding baguettes into paper as steam meets drizzle, a couple kissing in a doorway because the world has briefly agreed to blur. Café de Flore holds its glow against the gray, arguments about Sartre rising with the cigarette smoke, proving that ideas, like coffee, need steam to rise.Immanuel Kant would call it the sublime: beauty tinged with a mild terror of the formless. But Albert Camus would recognise something else: the Absurd. Here is a city that insists on meaning , on history, on art, on liberté, and here is the rain, indifferent, undoing it all without malice. The Parisian, caught between an awning and a downpour, does not despair. He lights a cigarette, adjusts his scarf, and keeps walking under a sky that has stolen the skyline, past the plane trees that have seen empires rust and still root themselves in the wet, past the tourists who came for permanence and found only reflection, past the museums where pigment waits for dry eyes to return. That gesture, futile and dignified, is Camus’s revolt in miniature: to live as if the blur were a canvas, even knowing the water will take it. In rain, Paris stops performing and simply exists, and in doing so, reminds us that to exist is always, a little, to be undone , and to go on anyway.
When Paris loses its monuments to rain and mist, it gets them back as reflections. Beauty and meaning aren’t erased , they’re translated. From stone to water, from skyline to street, from eternal to ephemeral. The trees keep their slow patience on the promenades, and Montmartre, washed and glistening, keeps its vigil above the blur, until the clouds lift and the Eiffel Tower returns, line by line, from mist to iron again, standing as if it had never doubted itself, while the tourists, damp and laughing, fold their maps and decide the detour was the destination, and the museums exhale their crowds back into a city that has remembered how to shine.
( Avtar Mota)
CHINAR SHADE by Autarmota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.
Monday, May 4, 2026
THE BAGUETTE AND THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
CHINAR SHADE by Autarmota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.
Thursday, April 30, 2026
WOUNDS OF THE SOUL ARE NEVER ERASED: THEY REMAIN BURIED
CHINAR SHADE by Autarmota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
BOOK REVIEW : THE WAVES OF RESILIENCE ( THE STORY OF RADIO SHARDA )
Review
of the book “The Waves of Resilience:
The Story of Radio Sharda” ….Edited by Ramesh Hangloo
The Waves of Resilience: (The
Story of Radio Sharda), edited by Ramesh Hangloo and published by Pir Panchal
(CESES) Organisation, is a deeply evocative and intellectually grounded
contribution to the discourse on cultural survival, memory, and identity in
exile. Priced at Rs 499/-, the volume (190 pages ) brings together 29 essays
that collectively document the history, creation, and far-reaching contribution
of Radio Sharda, a pioneering initiative dedicated to the preservation of the Kashmiri language and culture in the aftermath of the forced displacement of
the Kashmiri Pandit community from Kashmir. This volume must be read not merely
as an institutional chronicle but as a layered cultural text that captures the
anxieties, aspirations, and resilience of a community negotiating its identity
under conditions of prolonged exile. It stands at the intersection of
historiography, cultural studies, and memory discourse, offering insights that
are both academically significant and emotionally compelling.
Editorial Vision and Structure
As
editor, Ramesh Hangloo demonstrates a clear and purposeful vision. The decision
to compile 29 essays from a wide spectrum of contributors ensures that the
narrative is neither singular nor reductive. Instead, it unfolds as a
polyphonic account, enriched by the diversity of voices and experiences
represented within its pages. The contributors include distinguished figures
from the Kashmiri Pandit community, such as Dr K L Chowdhary, Vijay Bakaya, Prof. B.L. Zutshi, Pran Kishore Kaul, Arvind Gigoo, Prof. A.N. Sadhu, Prof. R.L. Shant,
Ashok Ogra, and Dr R L Bhat, among many others. Their collective engagement
lends the work both intellectual depth and cultural authenticity.
The
essays are thoughtfully curated to trace the evolution of Radio Sharda, from
its conceptual genesis to its emergence as a vital cultural institution. At the
same time, they situate this journey within the broader historical context of
displacement, thereby linking the story of the radio station to the larger
narrative of the Kashmiri Pandit experience.
Radio Sharda: A Living Archive of Culture
At
the centre of the book lies the remarkable story of Radio Sharda. Established
as a community radio initiative, it has grown into a powerful medium for
cultural preservation and dissemination. The essays collectively underscore its
role as a living archive, one that not only records but actively produces culture.
Radio
Sharda’s programming, which spans music, literature, oral traditions, religious
discourse, and contemporary issues, serves as a vital conduit for the
transmission of cultural knowledge. In exile, where traditional modes of
cultural transmission are disrupted, such a platform becomes indispensable. It
recreates, in an auditory form, the shared spaces that once existed within the
homeland. The emphasis on the Kashmiri language is particularly noteworthy.
Language, as the contributors repeatedly highlight, is not merely a tool of
communication but a repository of collective memory. By prioritising Kashmiri
in its broadcasts, Radio Sharda performs a crucial function: it ensures that
the language remains alive, relevant, and accessible to future generations.
Ramesh Hangloo and His Team: An Extraordinary Contribution
The
book foregrounds the extraordinary
efforts of Ramesh Hangloo and his team. Their work on the ground represents a
rare and commendable example of community-driven cultural preservation. In an
era where displacement often leads to cultural dilution, their initiative
stands as a powerful counterpoint.
As
per the essays, Hangloo’s vision has been both pragmatic and deeply rooted in
cultural consciousness. He recognises that the survival of a community’s
identity depends not only on remembering the past but on actively engaging with
it in the present. Through Radio Sharda, he has created a platform that enables
such engagement, fostering a sense of continuity despite the rupture of exile. Equally
significant is the collective effort of his team. Their contributions, spanning
programming, content creation, technical management, and outreach, are integral
to the success of the initiative. Theirs is a labour of commitment, sustained
over years, and marked by a profound sense of purpose. Their efforts remain
praiseworthy on all fronts for promoting, preserving, and ensuring the
continuity of the language and culture of a community under severe stress
following their forced exile from Kashmir.
Themes of Memory, Identity, and Resilience
The book's thematic core centres on memory, identity, and resilience. The
essays engage with memory not as a passive recollection but as an active
process of reconstruction. In exile, memory becomes a site of resistance, a
means of asserting identity in the face of displacement. The contributors also
explore the challenges of intergenerational transmission. The younger
generation, growing up outside Kashmir, often finds itself distanced from its
cultural roots. The book addresses this concern with sensitivity, emphasising
the need for deliberate efforts to bridge this gap. In this context, Radio
Sharda emerges as a crucial mediator, facilitating the transmission of cultural
knowledge across generations.
Resilience,
as the title suggests, is the overarching theme. The story of Radio Sharda is,
in essence, a story of the resilience of a community that refuses to relinquish its
cultural identity despite the adversities it has faced. The essays collectively
celebrate this resilience, while also acknowledging the challenges that
accompany it. The essays collectively examine the pivotal role of Radio Sharda
as a cultural and emotional lifeline for a displaced community grappling with
the trauma of exile. Rather than being merely a broadcasting platform, Radio
Sharda is portrayed as a unifying force that responds to the aspirations,
anxieties, and identity needs of a community under severe stress.
A
dominant theme across the essays is the preservation of cultural identity
through various programmes like Vangij-Vor, Aaradhana, Safar Zindagi Hund,
Meiyan Kasheer, Aash Pagahitch (
a programme for children ), Orzuv /Health Programme and many more programmes. Through programmes
in the mother tongue, the radio station sustains linguistic continuity and
safeguards traditions that risk fading in displacement. Contributors emphasise
how hearing familiar voices, idioms, and music recreates a sense of home, even
in exile. The essays also highlight Radio Sharda’s role in psychological
healing. For a community marked by loss and dislocation, the station provides
comfort, solidarity, and a shared emotional space. It allows individuals to
express grief, resilience, and hope, thereby reducing isolation and reinforcing
collective belonging. Radio Sharda,
located at Lower Buta Nagar, TRT Migrant Camp, Jammu (181121; Tel: +91
191-2597806), broadcasts on the FM band at 90.4 MHz, covering Jammu city and
its surrounding regions. Beyond its terrestrial reach, the station is readily
accessible worldwide via online streaming on TuneIn (Radio Sharda 90.4 FM). Over the years, Radio
Sharda has cultivated a dedicated listenership among the Kashmiri diaspora,
extending its cultural and community presence not only within Jammu but across
different parts of the world.
Conclusion
The
Waves of Resilience: The Story of Radio Sharda ultimately stands as an
important contribution to the documentation of cultural perseverance in exile.
By bringing together diverse voices across its essays, it not only chronicles
the journey of a community radio initiative but also situates it within the
broader context of identity, memory, and displacement. While the volume
foregrounds the efforts of Ramesh Hangloo and his colleagues at Radio Sharda,
it does so in a manner that underscores the larger significance of collective
cultural action. The book demonstrates how sustained, community-driven
initiatives can play a vital role in safeguarding linguistic and cultural
heritage under conditions of rupture.
Overall,
the collection portrays Radio Sharda as far more than a medium of entertainment
or information. It emerges as a symbol of resilience and continuity; a
community-driven institution that nurtures identity, fosters cohesion, and
helps displaced people articulate and sustain their aspirations in the face
of enduring adversity. In this sense, the work extends beyond a commemorative
account; it serves as a reflective record of resilience, illustrating how
media, memory, and community engagement intersect to sustain a living cultural
legacy.
(Avtar Mota )
PS
“The Waves of Resilience: The Story of Radio Sharda” was formally released by Lt. Governor Shri Manoj Sinha at a widely attended function in Jammu on 28th April, 2026. The event was organised by Ramesh Hangloo, Founder and Director of Radio Sharda, along with his dedicated team. Speaking on the occasion, the Lieutenant Governor lauded the commendable efforts of Radio Sharda in preserving and promoting the language, culture, and heritage of the exiled Kashmiri community. He emphasised the importance of such initiatives in keeping cultural roots alive despite displacement. The book chronicles the inspiring journey of Radio Sharda as a cultural lifeline for the displaced community, showcasing resilience, identity, and the power of community media.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.
THANK YOU, RADIO SHARDA,JAMMU
CHINAR SHADE by Autarmota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.

















































